No, the OECD did say that, but I have to say, in fairness to my American friends, that I think the OECD study is somewhat badly flawed.
The measure that I think is more appropriate is average revenue per minute. When you look at that, Canada is one of the ten lowest-priced countries in the world for cellphone service. As you say, our cable rates are very competitive in Canada.
If you think a little about the cellphone service, too, the newspapers are full of stories about how AT&T can't keep up with demand. They're constantly dropping calls. People can't get data connectivity. Canadians get a very high-quality and very reliable service here.
Today we have three HSPA-plus networks in Canada, offering 21 megabits per second. There's not a country in the world that can say that.
So I think we do have good services here, but I agree with your point: Canadians do not want to pay more and they are not prepared to pay more; they want their service providers to be competitive.